Chapter 5 - Flight Rules Flashcards

1
Q

Aircraft Lighting

A

Except when the nature of operations requires different lighting displays (formation, nvd, fclp, emergency) or the model aircraft configuration precludes compliance, the following rules shall apply:

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2
Q

Position Lights

A

Shall be displayed during the period 30 min before official sunset until 30 min after official sunrise.
Anytime when prevailing visibility is less than 3 statute miles. During these conditions, they shall be displayed:
Immediately before engine start and anytime the engine(s) are running
When the aircraft is being towed unless its otherwise illuminated
When an aircraft is parked and likely to cause a hazard unless it is otherwise illuminated or marked with obstruction lights

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3
Q

Anti-Collision lights

A

Anticollision lights shall be used immediately before engine start and at all times when the aircraft engine(s) is in operation, except when the use of such lights adversely affects ground operations. They may be turned off when the rotating light reflects into the cockpit.

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4
Q

Landing Taxi Lights

A

Landing/taxi lights should be utilized for all taxi movements ashore during the hours of darkness unless a taxi signalman is directing the aircraft. Use of those lights during landing approaches within class B,C, or D airspace is recommended.

Good judgement should be exercised to avoid blinding pilots of other aircraft
Use of landing/taxi lights is recommended in areas of high bird concentration

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5
Q

Formation Lights

A

Reduced lighting or lights-out operation are authorized when required for effective training, all participating aircraft must be positively de-conflicted from other aircraft and operations are conducted within approved special use airspace.

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6
Q

Right of Way

A

When single naval aircraft are converging with an aircraft in formation, the formation flight has the right of way. In other cases the formation shall be considered as a single aircraft.

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7
Q

Unusual Maneuvers within Class B,C or D

A

Pilots shall not perform or request clearance to perform unusual maneuvers within class B,C,or D if such maneuvers are not essential to the performance of the flight. ATC personnel are not permitted to approve a pilots request, or ask the pilot to perform such maneuvers.

Unnecessary low passes, unscheduled fly-bys, climbs at very steep angles, practice approaches to altitudes below specific minimums, or flat hatting.

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8
Q

Aircraft Airspeed

A

FAR 91
Below 10,000’ MSL - 250 KIAS
At or below 2500’ above the surface within 4 NM of Class C or D - 200 KIAS
In airspace underlying Class B or in a VFR corridor - 200 KIAS

FAA has authorized DoD to exceed 250 KIAS below 10,000’ for certain military requirements

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9
Q

Flight over the high seas

A

International law recognizes the right of aircraft of all nations to fly in airspace over the high seas.
Naval aircraft should operate in accordance with ICAO procedures in OPNAVINST 3770.4 and DoD FLIP GP.

Tower or radar control by a ship, FACSFAC, or other suitable agency, shall be used to the maximum extent practicable. The degree of control shall be appropriate to the nature of the operation.

When operating offshore within domestic ARTCC boundaries, airspace of the Hawaiian Islands, and the San Juan Domestic Control Area, Navy policy is to use domestic air traffic control services and procedures to the maximum extent practicable consistent with mission requirements.

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10
Q

ACM

A

Defined as aggressive three-dimensional maneuvering between two or more aircraft simulating offensive or defensive aerial combat where the potential for role reversal exists.

Aerobatic maneuvers in accordance with NATOPS manuals on scheduled training flights approved by competent authority are not considered ACM.

Air intercepts, performed in accordance with NATOPS manuals or as prescribed by cognizant aviation TYCOMs are not considered to be ACM.

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11
Q

Formation Flying

A

A flight of more than one aircraft operating by prior arrangement as a single aircraft with regard to altitude, navigation, and position reporting, and where separation between aircraft within the flight rests with the pilots in that flight.

Formation flying is authorized only for units and types of aircraft for which a valid requirement exists.

A standard formation is a formation with a proximity of no more than 1 mile laterally or longitudinally and within 100 feet vertically.

Non-standard formation flights shall be limited to a maximum of four aircraft and shall be approved by ATC.

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12
Q

Formation Preflight

A

The formation leader shall execute one flight plan for the formation and shall:
Sign the flight plan as PIC
Ensure all pilots are briefed on weather and navigational aids
Each pilot has a valid instrument rating
Ensure a formation brief is conducted with loss of sight, lost comms, inadvertent IMC, and emergency procedures
Ensure the necessary maps, charts and pubs are in the possession of each pilot
Ensure the formation integrity is maintained

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13
Q

Formation Instrument Departures

A

Two-plane formation into instrument conditions is authorized provided the weather is at or above published circling minimums for the runway in use. If a circling approach is not authorized, cieling and visibility must be at least 1000/3.

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14
Q

Joining Formations

A

Unless specifically ordered, a single aircraft shall not join a formation in the air.
The orders shall be given prior to takeoff.
Pilots shall ensure that both aircraft exchanging the lad are aware of the change.

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15
Q

Unplanned Formation Flight

A

In the event unscheduled formation flight becomes necessary, every attempt shall be made by the aircrew involved to conduct a sufficient in-flight brief prior to join-up.

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16
Q

See and Avoid

A

Applies to visual flight conditions
Pilots are responsible for their own seperation
The following shall serve as additional precautions:
Electronic equipment such as airborne radar should be used where feasible
Where available, radar advisory service shall be requested especially when VFR flight is required through high-density traffic areas

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17
Q

Special VFR

A

Pilot must obtain authorization from ATC, minimum is 500/1 clear of clouds
Pilot must be certified for instrument flight

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18
Q

Min weather outside controlled airspace

A

Outside controlled airspace, tiltrotors in helicopter mode and helicopters may be operated below 1200’ AGL, clear of clouds, when visibility is less than 1 statute mile is operated at a speed that allows the pilot adequate opportunity to see and avoid other air traffic and maintain obstacle clearance.

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19
Q

VFR Minimums - Class A

A

None / None

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20
Q

VFR Minimums - Class B

A

3 sm
Clear of Clouds

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21
Q

VFR Minimums - Class C

A

3 sm
1/5 2

22
Q

VFR Minimums - Class D

A

3 sm
1/5 2

23
Q

VFR Minimums - Class E
SETFOOD

A

<10000 - 3 1/5 2
>10000 - 5 1/1 1
Surface
Extensions
Transitions
Federal Airways
Offshore
Other
Domestic

24
Q

VFR Minimums - Class G

A

Day <1200 - 1sm Clear of Clouds
Day >1200 - 1sm 1/5 2
Night - 3 1/5 2
>1200 and >10000MSL - 5 1/1 1

25
Q

Required Instrument Flight equipment

A

The pitot heater and all vacuum pressure
Airspeed indicator
Altimeter
Turn-and-slip indicator
A clock displaying hours minutes and seconds
Attitude indicator
Magnetic compass with calibration card
Heading indicator or gyrostabilized magcompass
VSI

Deice or Icing control for flights in known or forecast icing
Navigation lights

26
Q

EKBs

A

Approved EKBs can increase SA. Unapproved photography and gaming are prohibited
Approved uses:
Preflight planning including weather and filing
Carriage of electronic NATOPS, FLIPS, charts, approach procedures
In-aircraft weather updates prior to taxi or inflight
Situational awareness

EKBs shall not be the primary source of navigation

Use of devices in classified aircraft are governed by CNAFINST 5510.18

27
Q

Minimum Altitude

A
  1. When in uncontrolled airspace, an aircraft shall not be flown less than 1000’ above the highest terrain, surface of the water, or obstacle within 22 miles of the intended line of flight except when the mission requires otherwise.
  2. When over designated mountainous terrain, an aircraft shall bot be flown less than 2000’ above highest terrain within 22 miles of intended flight path
28
Q

Aerial Photography

A

Except when supporting a mission requirement, aircrew shall not perform aerial or still photography in flight unless authorized by the commanding officer via the flight schedule. Once authorized, images or video shall not be posted to the internet unless approved by the security manager and designated PAO.

29
Q

Communication Equipment

A

The aircraft shall have two-way radio communication equipment and operating navigation equipment
Ensure special frequencies are available in the aircraft
A functioning radar beacon transponder
Military GPS avionics are not authorized for navigation unless certified by PMA-209
DoD flips or approved commercial charts are required in the cockpit and shall be the primary source for navigation to complement aircraft navigational database.

30
Q

Takeoff Mins

A

Standard rating
Published minimums for the available non-precision approach, but not less than 300/1
Equal to or better than Precision Approach Minimums for the landing runway in use, but in no case when weather is less than 200 / .5 / 2400 runway visual range

31
Q

Approach criteria for multipiloted aircraft

A

When reported weather is at or below published minimums for the approach to be conducted, an approach shall not be commenced unless the aircraft has the capability to proceed to a suitable alternate.

32
Q

General Instrument Approach and Landing Mins

A

Helicopters required visibilty minimum may be reduced to one-half the published visibility minimum, but in no case less than 1/4 mile or 1200’ RVR. Based off the unique maneuvering capability of the helicopter and is based on airspeeds not exceeding 90 knots on final aprroach. COPTER minimums shall not be reduced.

33
Q

Criteria for continuing an approach

A

Pilots shall not descend below the MDA or continue an approach below DH unless they have runway environment in sight and in their judgement a safe landing can be made.

Precision Approach - A missed approach shall be executed upon reaching decision height unless the runway environment is in sight and a safe landing can be made.

Non-precision - A missed approach shall be executed upon reaching the missed approach point if visual reference is not established and/or a safe landing cannot be accomplished.

34
Q

Final Approach Abnormalities during Radar Approach

A

Controller shall issue instructions to exectue a missed approach
1. Safe limits are exceeded or radical aircraft deviations are observed
2. Position or id of the aircraft is in doubt
3. radar contact is lost or a malfunctioning radar is suspected
4. Field conditions are observed from tower preventing approach completion

35
Q

Practice Approaches

A

Single pilot aircraft may execute a practice approach where weather is below minimums when the facility is not the filed destination or alternate, and the weather at filed destination and alternate meet filing criteria.

36
Q

Operating in towered airspace

A

Either tower or an appropriate control frequency shall be monitored at all times

36
Q

Operating in towered airspace

A

Either tower or an appropriate control frequency shall be monitored at all times

37
Q

Autorotations

A

Practice Autorotations shall be conducted within the limits of the field boundary over a surface upon which a full autorotation can be safely completed and that is readily accessible to crash, rescue, and firefighting equipment.
Practice autos shall required the specific approval of the tower

38
Q

Taxiing

A

Air taxi / ground operations shall be conducted with sufficient horizontal separation to preclude damage to aircraft, property, or personnel.

38
Q

Taxiing

A

Air taxi / ground operations shall be conducted with sufficient horizontal separation to preclude damage to aircraft, property, or personnel.

39
Q

Altitude

A

B,C,D Airspace - in accordance with local air ops
When no other guidance, shall not exceed 500’ AGL unless specifically cleared by tower

40
Q

Night Hover over water

A

Night/low visibility hover ops over water shall be conducted using aircraft equipped with operable automatic hover system on all occasions when a natural horizon is not visible.

40
Q

Taxiing

A

Air taxi / ground operations shall be conducted with sufficient horizontal separation to preclude damage to aircraft, property, or personnel.

41
Q

Helicopter over terrain flight

A

Terrain flights (low level, contour, NOE) shall be conducted only as operational necessity dictates, in training scenarios within designated training areas, or as published procedures and clearances prescribe.

42
Q

Helicopter Operations

A

All aircrew shall remain inside the aircraft cabin during all flight regimes unless deemed by the aircraft commander to be operationally necessary for safety of flight or mission accomplishment. Any acts conducted for thrill purposes are strictly prohibited.

43
Q

Noise Sensitive Areas

A

Breeding farms, resorts, beaches, and those areas designated by the US department of interior as national parks, national monuments, and national recreational areas.

Shall be avoided at altitudes of less than 3000’ AGL except when in compliance with
Traffic or approach pattern
VR or IR route
Special use airspace

44
Q

External Cargo

A

Pilots carrying external stores/cargo shall avoid overflying populated areas whenever possible.

45
Q

Flat hatting

A

Flat hatting or any maneuvers conducted at low altitude and/or high rate of speed for thrill purposes over land or water are prohibited. Any acts conducted for thrill purposes are strictly prohibited.

46
Q

Firing

A

Firing at large fish, whales, or any wildlife is prohibited

47
Q

Jettisoning fuel

A

Whenever practicable, fuel shall not be jettisoned below 6000’ above the terrain.
Should weather or emergency dictate, every effort shall be made to avoid populated areas.
When under positive control, the PIC should advise ATC that fuel will be jettisoned.

48
Q

Expenditure of stores through cloud cover

A

Over the high seas- air and surface clearance can be ensures through radar surveillance.
This does not relieve the duties in a warning area or with a notam
When operating over land, with an activated restricted area, the controlling authority must specifically approve. The operational commander is responsible for ensuring the firing/drops are conducted in the specified airspace and impact

49
Q

Emergency Jettison

A

Nothing precludes emergency jettisoning through cloud cover. pilots are directly responsible for their actions and must take every possible precaution to minimize danger to other aircraft, persons or property.